Puccini’s
Manon Lescaut had something of a difficult
gestation. The composer had enticed another man’s wife
to live with him and it was make or break time for him after
his first two operas,
Le villi premiered on 31 May 1884
and
Edgar at La Scala on 21 April 1889, were only modestly
received. He couldn’t settle with the chosen librettists
who were changed to the extent that none put his name to the
programme at the premieres. Being aware of these difficulties,
and that shortly after the scheduled premiere La Scala was to
stage Verdi’s last opera,
Falstaff, Puccini’s
publisher moved the venue to Turin. Despite these last minute
fears the work was a resounding success. The applause began with
the brief tenor aria
Tra voi, belle in act 1 (CD 1 tr.2)
and Puccini had to appear on stage to acknowledge it. At the
end of the performance the composer and cast took thirty curtain
calls.
Manon Lescaut set Puccini on a secure financial
and artistic future. Whilst not rivalling
La Boheme, Tosca or
Madama
Butterfly among
Puccini’s most popular works,
its fraught emotional story draws from the composer all the hallmarks
of his renowned compositional style.
1957 was a very busy year for Callas as far as recording was
concerned. This was particularly in comparison with her declining
appearances at La Scala as her socialite life-style took over.
In 1956 she and Gobbi had had a success there in
Il barbiere
di Siviglia (see
review)
and Walter Legge was keen to record the duo in the Rossini opera.
Legge was also aware that Decca in particular was leaving his
company behind in the technology of the emerging stereophonic
recordings. This emerging technology was not possible at La Scala
and the recording was made in London in February 1957. In that
year Callas featured in three productions at La Scala with Legge
choosing only to record
La Sonnambula with his star soloist.
He preferred to record her in the eponymous roles in Puccini’s
Turandot which
she had not sung for several years, and in
Manon Lescaut,
a role she never sang on stage. The two recordings were made
in successive weeks in the La Scala theatre in mono with Tullio
Serafin on the rostrum in both. I do not know how far Serafin
prepared her, but Callas’s portrayal as Manon certainly
comes over as one of the best of her Puccini interpretations.
She varies her vocal tone and nuance as Manon evolves from the
flighty fickleness of act 1, (CD 1 trs.1-12) through being Geronte’s
rich self-centred mistress of act 2, (CDs 1 trs. 13-23) to her
desperation and desolation in the final act (CD 2 trs.8-12).
It is particularly in the last act, with her ability to act with
the voice, that Callas is able fully to convey Manon’s
fraught emotional state in
Sola, perduta, abbandonata (CD
2 tr.11) and the drama of her desperate situation as she is alone
and dying in the desert. Giuseppe Di Stefano is in good voice
as Des Grieux and particularly ardent in the act two duet
Oh
saro la piu bella! (CD 1 tr.20). The Lescaut and Geronte
are adequate.
The Di Stefano appendices on CD 2 are not taken from any of the
complete opera sets the tenor made with Callas. The
Recondita
armonia (tr.13) is that which appeared on HMV Red Label 78rpm
shellac in 1948 with the tenor singing with fine taste, elegant
phrasing and honeyed tone. The sonic quality of this earlier
performance from London has much to commend it as a recording.
The four items conducted by Antonio Votto, and recorded at La
Scala, are the same as on the recently issued EMI Classics Icon
206 0752 (see
review).
Di Stefano’s tone is coarser and those earlier honeyed
tones so admired by many, not least by fellow tenors, have gone
albeit his elegance of phrase has not. The high note in
Ch’ella
mi creda libero from
La Fanciulla del West is a little
squeezed (tr.14), the tenor coming more into his own in the
Gianni
Schicchi excerpt that follows. Di Stefano did not feature
in the complete
Turandot recording that preceded the
Manon
Lescaut recording. The role of des Grieux was sung by Eugenio
Fernandi, a more robust voice. Here, Di Stefano’s
Non
piangere, Liu (tr.16) is loaded with pathos whilst his
Nessun
dorma! concludes with a ringing high note (Tr.17) as a fitting
conclusion to the worthwhile appendix.
This performance was at full price as recently as 2006 and comparing
this recording quality with that on the bargain priced
Complete
Edition of Callas’s Studio Recordings (see
review)
I can only marvel yet again at the sonic excellence that restoration
engineer Mark Obert-Thorn achieves from LP originals now made
available at bargain price. Let us hope that proposals to extend
copyright do not come to fruition, as this quality allied to
price advantage would disappear overnight.
Robert J Farr